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Tolo News in Dari – May 20, 2023

20th May, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

‘Every Midwife Is Afraid’: Worrying Signs Over Maternal Deaths In Afghanistan

20th May, 2023 · admin

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
May 20, 2023

By Ahmad Hanayish
Sahar Lewal
Michael Scollon

Giving birth is a life or death struggle for women in Afghanistan, where roughly one mother is believed to die every two hours from preventable pregnancy and childbirth complications.

Even mothers who survive face the stark reality that their newborns may not, with the Taliban’s Health Ministry estimating 22 children die for every 1,000 live births.

“Why would a woman need to go to the hospital?” 31-year-old Zia Gul, a resident of the northern Parwan Province, recalled her husband saying during her difficult pregnancies. “There are only men at the hospital; there are no female doctors.”

Gul told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi that her husband’s refusal to let her see a doctor contributed to the loss of two of her newborn children.

Gul’s experience is in line with those of many Afghan women, particularly in conservative rural areas, who are bound by the Islamic custom of mahram. The practice prohibits women from leaving their home without a male relative, bars them from being treated by male doctors, and gives them little say in their own health decisions.

But the traditional customs enforced by Gul’s in-laws, who allowed no discussion on the matter, are just one of the many factors that contribute to high maternal mortality in Afghanistan’s deeply patriarchal society.

Years of political upheaval, economic woes, the exodus of medical professionals, low literacy and public awareness on health issues, poor infrastructure, and the lack of access to medical care in remote areas all add up to astonishingly high maternal mortality rates.

Among The World’s Worst

According to statistics compiled by the World Bank, the United Nations Population Fund (UNPFA), and other UN agencies, 1,450 mothers were dying for every 100,000 live births by 2000, shortly before the Taliban was ousted from power.

Over the course of the next 20 years, due to increased funding and attention paid to maternal health care and awareness by the UNPFA, international aid agencies such as Doctors Without Borders (MSF), and the Afghan government, that number was cut by more than half to 620 deaths by 2020.

The Taliban’s seizure of power in August 2021 raised fears that the extremist group would reimpose the draconian policies of its first stint in power from 1996-2001, including the banning of female education and employment as it enforced mahram.

Many of those fears have been realized. Girls above the sixth grade have been barred from attending school, women are banned from pursuing university education, and women are no longer allowed to work for international aid agencies. Marham is also more prevalent, with women officially required to wear the all-encompassing burqa and remain at home unless accompanied by a male relative.

Once again, according to Aleksandar Sasha Bodiroza, the UNFPA’s representative in Afghanistan, women’s ability to freely access health facilities to seek maternal and newborn care has been restricted.

No outside nationwide statistics have been made available since 2020, but the Afghan Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, citing recent figures from the Taliban-led government’s Health Ministry, told Radio Azadi that the maternal mortality ratio has risen only slightly under Taliban rule.

While the figure, 638 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, is the same number recorded by the international community in 2017, it is still high enough to rank Afghanistan among the world’s 10 worst in terms of maternal mortality.

That the situation has remained relatively stable is also difficult to fathom, considering the vast numbers of doctors who fled the country as the Taliban regained power, the country’s dire economic situation and multiple humanitarian crises, and the increased pressures on aid workers and on Afghan women.

The state health-care system, propped up by foreign aid for two decades, has also suffered from a dramatic drop in international funding since the Taliban takeover.

Health workers and outside agencies say the damage done to the health sector is undeniable.

“The system has changed in our country. Naturally, it had an impact on the country’s economy and the services that the government provides to the people,” Hamid Jabari, an Afghan physician who was expelled from the country by the Taliban, told Radio Azadi. “The negative effects are being felt, including the lack of professionals in government, especially the health sector.”

Some of the losses are offset by the continued involvement of outside organizations, including private hospitals, the UNFPA, and MSF, which have been able to continue to employ women despite the Taliban’s ban on women aid workers due to an exemption for health workers.

But tremendous obstacles remain. Bodiroza said in written comments that “despite the exemption of the health sector from the ban on female humanitarian workers, the sector is also suffering from the ban as there are NGOs that indirectly support efficient delivery of health services — not as frontline health workers but as back office staff, for example.”

Afghan women health-care workers, in turn, told Radio Azadi they are being prevented from carrying out their work or expanding their expertise, even as the contributing factors to maternal mortality become more severe. The result is that newborns or pregnant women are now at greater risk of preventable deaths during pregnancy, childbirth, and in the first few weeks after childbirth.

“Many pregnant women can’t access antenatal or postnatal care, and the health system struggles to treat women who experience complications in pregnancy,” Tomas Bendl, field communications manager for MSF in Afghanistan, told RFE/RL in written comments. “A shortage of qualified female health-care staff also affects access to health care, as maternity and sometimes pediatric wards are women-only spaces.”

Dangers At Home

Hussain Sayer, a doctor from Parwan Province, told Radio Azadi that childbirth should ideally take place at a maternity hospital under the care of an obstetrician.

He said it was a “bad custom” for women to be denied access to health facilities during their pregnancies and warned that the only available option for many women — home birth — carries great risk.

In the event of births taking place at home, he said, they should be supervised by a trained midwife.

But while great emphasis was made over the past two decades to increase the number of professional midwives in Afghanistan capable of providing medical assistance during pregnancies, deliveries, and postnatal care, many Afghan women who entered the profession say they are unable to help.

Nadia, a midwife who spoke to Radio Azadi on condition that only her first name be used, said many of her colleagues who specialized in gynecology and obstetrics are “unemployed and stay at home” since the Taliban takeover.

Another midwife, who declined to give her name due to security concerns, said fear prevents many of her colleagues from working.

“Midwives don’t go from place to place to assist with births — that’s why the problems have increased,” she told Radio Azadi. “Every midwife is afraid for her life.”

Restrictions on women’s mobility have had a harmful effect on efforts to educate communities on women’s health in remote areas of the country, according to the UNFPA’s Bodiroza.

Even when male family members do allow women to visit health-care facilities, the difficulties in reaching them in rural areas limits the number of visits and can mean help is often administered too late.

“I took my wife to the clinic by motorcycle,” Abdul Samad, a resident of the southeastern Ghazni Province told Radio Azadi, explaining he lived far from the nearest village with maternity facilities.

While Samad managed to get his wife to a doctor, shortly after he left to retrieve her mother, he received bad news. “Half an hour later, I received a call saying my wife was in agony,” he said. “When I returned, I saw they were right” — both his wife and their newborn child had died.

Continuing Efforts

It is difficult to assess where Afghanistan truly stands in terms of maternal mortality, but the benefits of continued outreach efforts and on-the-ground medical aid are obvious.

Bendl said MSF operates two projects in Afghanistan that focus on maternal health care, among other things, and employ more than 1,700 medical professionals in Afghanistan, of whom more than half are women.

Last year, MSF assisted in more than 42,700 deliveries, more than 8,000 of which were marked by obstetric complications. In Lashkar Gah, capital of the southern Helmand Province, MSF’s support for a hospital resulted in an average maternal mortality rate of 0.1 percent. In the southeastern Khost Province, where MSF operates a maternity hospital, the mortality rate was 0.02 percent.

Bodiroza of the UNFPA said the agency continues “to deliver a full range of maternal health services in Afghanistan” and supports facilities and delivers essential reproductive health supplies in 32 out of the country’s 34 provinces.

Despite the positives, those involved in providing health services in Afghanistan say much more needs to be done.

Bodiroza said the UNFPA estimates that without immediate and sustained support for reproductive health services, the situation could lead to an additional 51,000 maternal deaths by 2025.

Adding that “reproductive health services are therefore more critical than ever,” Bodiroza said the UN agency is aiming to reach 10.6 million people — including 6.8 million women and girls — in remote areas with reproductive health support.

Bendl said that “there is no doubt that a dysfunctional health system, widespread poverty, and increased restrictions placed on women are at the heart of the current humanitarian crisis.”

“If we want the situation to improve,” he said, “policymakers, donors, and local authorities must urgently focus on strengthening primary medical care.” And women, he said, “must be allowed to pursue further education and employment opportunities, to raise income for their families and to ensure there are sufficient female health workers in the country to meet the needs.”

Written and reported by Michael Scollon, with additional reporting by Radio Azadi correspondents Ahmad Hanayish and Sahar Lewal

Copyright (c) 2023. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Afghan Women, Health News | Tags: Maternal Death, Mortality Rates |

Taliban to Ensure Water Rights to Iran Within a Month: Iranian Envoy

20th May, 2023 · admin

The Helmand river stretches for 1,150 km from the Hindu Kush mountains into Hamoun wetlands which once supported great plant and animal diversity in Iran’s Sistan Basin.

Khaama: On Friday, Kazemi Qomi, the Iranian ambassador to Kabul, issued a fresh warning to the Taliban, urging them to get water rights as soon as possible. Qomi said in a TV interview that Iran would act if it were proven that the Helmand River had sufficient water and Kabul refused to grant the neighbouring country its water rights. “If there is water and the Taliban does not allow its flow to Iran, it is full proof for Iran that the issue is the nation’s right, and it knows how it should act,” Qomi said. Click here to read more (external link).

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Posted in Iran-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Helmand River, water |

Khalilzad Warns Pakistan’s ‘Triple Crisis’ Could Lead to War

19th May, 2023 · admin

Khalilzad

Michael Hughes: Afghan-born Western cowboy Zalmay Khalilzad cannot refrain from meddling in Central and South Asian affairs, with his crosshairs now focused on Islamabad, amid former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan’s struggle against the country’s military. In a new interview with Dawn, he went so far as to suggest the country’s problems could ignite a war and “change the balance of power” in the region.

Khalilzad played the key role in establishing the Karzai puppet regime in Afghanistan and helped pave the road for the Taliban seizure of Kabul. Now he apparently wants to play kingmaker again and is pushing regime change in Pakistan from afar. Earlier this week, Khalilzad spread rumors that Pakistan was plotting to arrest Imran Khan’s wife, Bushra Begum, while imposing an “obscure” sedition law against him.

Click here to read more.

Posted in Opinion/Editorial, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Imran Khan, Zalmay Khalilzad |

Violent Clash Erupts Once Again in Takhar as Taliban and Local Residents Lock Horns

19th May, 2023 · admin

8am: The clash took place on Thursday, May 18, in the village of Maghol Qeshlaq when Taliban members attempted to distribute pastures belonging to indigenous inhabitants among non-local individuals brought by the Taliban, known as Naqileen. According to sources, the residents of Khaja Bahauddin district rose up against the Taliban, armed with shovels and hammers, and prevented the distribution of the pastures to the Naqileen. Sources claim that Taliban authorities based in Kabul have issued orders to distribute one thousand jeribs of pasture land to Naqileen in this district. Last year, the Taliban forcibly displaced at least 400 indigenous Uzbek and Tajik families from the Muhajir Qeshlaq village, distributing their homes to the newcomers. Click here to read more (externa link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Taliban | Tags: Land grabbing, Naqileen, Pashtunization, Takhar |

Sex-shamed by Taliban and driven out of her homeland – but Afghanistan’s last female taekwondo fighter refuses to give in

19th May, 2023 · admin

Hamidi

The Independent (UK): Her high front kick could easily take down an opponent and win her a medal in any championship. But in Afghanistan, taekwondo champion Marzieh Hamidi has been sex-shamed by the Taliban and driven out of her homeland. “Many men in Taliban’s Afghanistan have been led to believe women cannot be champions. When I open my legs high up for training, they say ‘you lost your virginity, you’re bad’,” says Hamidi, who represented her country’s national team before the Taliban took over. Click here to read more (external link).

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Posted in Afghan Sports News, Afghan Women, Refugees and Migrants | Tags: Escape from the Taliban, Marzieh Hamidi, Taekwondo |

Taliban’s Participation In Kazan Forum Does Not Mean Its Recognition By Moscow: Envoy

19th May, 2023 · admin

Kabulov

Khaama: Zamir Kabulov, the Russian Presidential Envoy to Afghanistan, said that the Taliban’s participation in the Kazan Forum “absolutely did not mean” its recognition from Russia. The Russian envoy also said that the UN Security Council does not sanction the Taliban delegation that participated in the Russia-Islamic World Kazan forum event.   The Taliban delegation, prohibited in Russia, is represented at the Kazan Forum by participants not sanctioned by the UN Security Council. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Political News, Russia-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban |

Tolo News in Dari – May 19, 2023

19th May, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Crackdown: Women’s Restaurant Visits Trigger Fury as Guards in Herat Attacked

19th May, 2023 · admin

8am: According to these sources, enforcers from the Department of Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice attacked guards at several restaurants after some women entered without a “legitimate companion.” It has been reported that the guards who were assaulted are elderly individuals. One of the guards, who is around 55 years old, told Hasht-e Subh that the Taliban assaulted him because women entered without a “legitimate companion.” Click here to read more (external link).

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  • People’s Political Indifference
Posted in Afghan Women, Everyday Life, Taliban | Tags: Herat, Life under Taliban rule |

UNICEF, Afghan Female Staff Delivering Aid Despite Taliban Edicts

19th May, 2023 · admin

Margaret Besheer
VOA News
May 18, 2023

NEW YORK — The U.N. children’s agency representative in Afghanistan says his agency, including its female Afghan staff, continue to work in the country despite a Taliban decree banning local women from working for the organization.

“I would say that all women of the U.N. in Afghanistan are working,” UNICEF’s Fran Equiza told reporters during a news conference at U.N. headquarters in New York. “They are working some from home, some of them from offices, some of them from the field.”

He said this applies to UNICEF and other U.N. agencies in Afghanistan.

“The Afghan women are not going to give up, no matter what,” he said, speaking of their resilience and commitment to their country.

When the ban was announced in early April, the U.N. said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres found it “unacceptable” and “inconceivable” and feared it would further undermine the organization’s humanitarian work in the country. He convened a meeting of countries with special envoys for Afghanistan earlier this month in Doha, Qatar, to discuss what could be done about the intensifying Taliban crackdown on women.

Following the April edict, U.N. staff were instructed to work from home where possible until the organization could get clarity from Taliban authorities.

Equiza would not comment on whether female staff members have been physically or verbally harassed by the Taliban for defying their edict, stressing that the organization takes seriously its duty of care for its staff.

“We are still subject to threats and to a number of risks,” he told reporters. “We don’t take any decision that’s an unacceptable risk for anyone.”

The ban on Afghan women working with the U.N. followed a series of restrictions on women’s and girls’ rights, including prohibiting women from working with domestic and international aid groups and banning girls from attending secondary schools and universities.

The Taliban said last month that their decision to bar local women from working for the United Nations was an “internal social matter of Afghanistan” that all countries should respect. So far they have ignored an April 27 U.N. Security Council resolution demanding they swiftly reverse their restrictions.

Humanitarian emergency

More than 28 million people, including more than 15 million children, need humanitarian and protection assistance in Afghanistan. In Afghanistan’s conservative society, female aid workers are critical to reaching a large portion of the population.

Children are particularly hard hit by rampant poverty, which is estimated to affect nearly 90% of the population.

“They wake up hungry. They go to bed hungry. They don’t have clean water to quench their thirst, or soft blankets in which to sleep,” Equiza said. “They have become all too used to laboring at home, on the streets, in fields, in mines and in shops. Too many live in fear of violence or early marriage. Too many are burdened by the weight of adult responsibility. Too many have been robbed of an education — their one hope of a better life.”

UNICEF says 2.3 million Afghan children are expected to face acute malnutrition in 2023. Of that number, 875,000 of them need treatment for severe acute malnutrition, which can be deadly.

UNICEF has appealed for $1.65 billion this year to reach 19 million Afghans, including 10.3 million children. The appeal is less than a quarter funded, with the year nearly half over.

Posted in Afghan Women, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations |
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